We've already covered gifting Android and iPhone apps, Mac and PC apps, plus even gifts for coworkers. Now it's time to go through the fun and useful gifts we've covered throughout the past year. This is the Stuff We Like.

($60)
Like I said in the review, this BookBook iPhone wallet case is the best executed version of a case that's also a wallet that I've ever seen. It's so great that I'm still using it, months later, as my everyday wallet. Not only can it hold cash and cards, the flip-open nature of the book fully protects your phone while in your pocket, but still makes everything usable without having to constantly slide your phone in and out.

($30-$100)
IKEA is somewhere most of us decorate our homes with in college, after college and all the way to the point when we have enough money to afford quality furniture. Problem is, you end up having furniture that might look exactly the same as your friends. Want some way to individualize a little bit? There's Mykea, which manages to turn middlebrow Swedish design into middlebrow Swedish design—with an edge.

($10)
I covered Belkin's Conserve line of power-products in my post on how to save electricity, but this Conserve Socket is the cheapest way to get in on electricity savings. Instead of you having to remember to plug and unplug stuff when they're done charging, the Conserve Socket automatically shuts off power flow after a pre-set time. You can also use it for space heaters and fans without built-in safety timers, when you want it on for a certain period of time but might forget to turn them off afterwards.

($35)
Why just charge your MacBook when you can charge your MacBook and any USB device at the same time? You don't need to hog up one of your laptop slots anymore, which is useful on planes, in hotels or anywhere where you only have one power socket or if your USB ports are otherwise occupied. I've been testing this for a few weeks myself and can attest that it works very well. A bonus is that the PlugBug is a complete wall charger in itself, for the cases where you need a USB wall charger in a separate location.

($9)
Rather than going to Lowes or Home Depot every time you have to hang up a painting, just get one $9 kit and you'll be set for a long time. The kit has 290 pieces, so it covers most types of wall types in your home. Not a very luxurious gift, but definitely a practical one.

($25)
Laptops never have enough USB ports, and carrying around a USB hub can be clunky. So what do you do when you want to charge or sync two iPhones, an iPhone and an iPad or an iPod touch and an iPhone at the same time? This duaLink cable, which uses one port but has two 30-pin connectors. It's definitely handy for cars or nightstands, if you only have one USB charger. There are definitely instances where you have to do two-at-a-time and you can't just have one wait its turn.

($70)
I love having things inside other things, which is why this Pocket Briefcase is so neat to me. With this, you add a pen and paper to your wallet, making sure you always have something to write down notes, ideas or jokes if you want to. You could always use a phone, but sometimes the act of writing is more conducive to stimulating ideas than tapping them out with your thumbs.

($80)
I've checked out other iPad keyboard + case devices, and Adonit's still looks the best. (I haven't actually tested it myself, but other reviews look good.) When you boil it down, these things are just a case and a keyboard, but when done right, you can turn a read-only device into something you can do a good deal of text input on. When done really right, they look good and protect your device all at the same time.

($30)
Here's another example of stuff-inside-stuff that I Love: A mount that holds all three of the consoles' accessories at once. No longer will you have to make room for your Xbox Kinect, PlayStation Eye and Wii Sensor Bar separately when you can just conveniently mount it onto the wall—which is better for the Kinect anyway.

($12)
Digital tape measures are great, but why take that digital readout and then plug it into another calculator when your digital tape measure is already the calculator? Now that's just genius. Best of all, the tape measure is a strong, so it goes around curved objects and around corners easily.

($25)
It's hard to get all your utensils organized, and because everyone has different types and different amounts, there's no one-fit solution to a drawer organizer. But with DrawerDecor, you can customize a drawer layout to fit your utensils easily, because all it is is a flat sheet with various parts. Think of it like a LEGO set for your kitchen tools.

($50-$90)
Storing things on your nightstand is fine, but unless you place everything super close to you, you might not be able to reach a lot of it without standing up. What lazy person wants to do this? Instead, shove laptops, iPads, cellphones, books and lotion into a pocket on the side of your bed. One reach down with your arm and you're ready for anything you have planned.

($80)
I enjoy using sleep masks from time to time, and having one means I sleep better, but also means I sleep later, since it blocks out the sun from waking me up naturally. So how about putting a fake sunlight in the actual sleep mask set to an alarm? That's thinking ahead.

($100)
Adam Pash might hate smartphone IR remote devices, but I love anything that makes the thing in my pocket (my cellphone) a universal remote. This Harmony attaches to your Wi-Fi network and you can use any iOS device or Android phone to send it a signal, which then gets transmitted to IR and blasted to your entertainment devices. And since I use Logitech's Harmony universal remotes already, having a Harmony Link is basically second-nature at this point. Being able to adjust the volume, change channels and fire up TiVo recordings from the kitchen—out of line-of-sight—is worth it. Also, not having to reach over for the remote is handy as well.